Tokyo, Feb 1, 2026, 09:22 JST — Trading has ended for the day.
- Renesas fell 1.85% on Friday, finishing at 2,576 yen
- Wolfspeed won U.S. approval to issue 16.85 million shares to Renesas as part of its restructuring plan
- Renesas is set to release its full-year results on Feb. 5. Traders will be focused on the company’s guidance and any updates concerning Wolfspeed.
Renesas Electronics shares closed Friday 1.85% lower at 2,576 yen. The Tokyo Stock Exchange was closed Sunday; trading will pick up again Monday. (MarketScreener)
The chipmaker is gearing up for results week, set to release its full-year 2025 financial results on Feb. 5. It has stated it will hold off on comments until then. (Renesas Electronics)
The timing is crucial as investors weigh two shifting factors: the earnings outlook and a new regulatory milestone linked to Wolfspeed, a U.S. silicon-carbide specialist where Renesas is set to become a major shareholder.
Wolfspeed disclosed in a filing that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which vets foreign investments for national security concerns, approved its equity issuance to Renesas on Jan. 29. The company issued 16,852,372 shares to Renesas, and named Renesas executive Aris Bolisay to its board effective Feb. 2. (SEC)
Wolfspeed described the clearance as “the final milestone” in its prepackaged Chapter 11 restructuring, the U.S. court-supervised bankruptcy process. CEO Robert Feurle said the company remains “fully focused” on expanding its customer base and scaling “with discipline.” The company also revealed a higher post-issuance share count. (Business Wire)
For Renesas, the immediate concern isn’t just the optics of holding a board seat but the financial details tied to it — the value of the Wolfspeed stake, how it’s accounted for, and if management raises any red flags about cash flow, risks, or additional obligations.
On Feb. 5, investors will zero in on Renesas’ report to assess demand in its key automotive and industrial segments, sectors where order volumes often fluctuate sharply as customers adjust their inventory levels.
Still, risks remain. Wolfspeed’s stock might stay choppy following the restructuring, and a disappointing earnings forecast from Renesas could overshadow Wolfspeed’s news, dragging its shares down.
Renesas operates in automotive microcontrollers and power semiconductors, sectors where it faces rivals like Infineon and STMicroelectronics — industries that remain vulnerable to changes in EV and industrial demand.
Immediate catalysts are on deck: Monday’s Tokyo open could reveal insights from the Wolfspeed filings, while Renesas will report full-year results Thursday, Feb. 5.